Oddly, Amazon doesn't list a Kindle version for the US, despite the fact that I checked out said version from my local library.

Emperor Wilhelm II of Germany, Emperor Nicholas II of Russia, and King George V of Great Britain, all grandchildren of Queen Victoria, heads of state leading into WWI. And yet, despite their roles, none of them suited for the leadership roles in which they were thrust.

The book takes a look at the rulers from a very personal level, showing off their personalities and character, which was to have a huge impact on the world at large. Wilhelm, with his inferiority complex to the British, Nicholas with his cloistered reticence, and George, the last to come to rule, with his complete lack of focus.

Growing up in the royal families, it is made clear time and again that they had nothing in their upbringings to make a direct connection to their countries and people, no ability to determine matters of import from trivialities. Each man wants to be the autocrat, yet are trapped by the men around them, fed what others want them to see, badgered or ignored when their presence is inconvenient.

It truly is a sad treatise on the world of the late 19th century that these men, with their lack of connection to reality, were the ones that allowed millions to be driven to their death through their lack of leadership and disconnect from reality.

There is an excellent book called DREADNOUGHT that covers almost the exact same ground, coming at it from a naval armaments race angle but dealving deeply into the strange "families" that made up the European Monarchies at the time.

Just finished Redshirts by John Scalzi. It's very different from the Old Man's War trilogy, but in a good way. The main story was pretty good, but the last two of the three codas at the end made the overall story so much better.

Just finished Redshirts by John Scalzi. It's very different from the Old Man's War trilogy, but in a good way. The main story was pretty good, but the last two of the three codas at the end made the overall story so much better.

just finished myself. it was quick and fun, but if I read it again I'm probably just going to skip the codas. The first one was decent, the second one was OK, and by the time I got to the third one I pretty much skimmed over most of it.

Logged

Because I can,also because I don't care what you want.XBL: OriginalCeeKayWii U: CeeKay

Finished Assassin's Code, the most current entry in the Joe Ledger series by Jonathan Maberry, and now reading Bloodline, the next book in the Sigma Force series by James Rollins. Loved Assassin's Code and cannot get enough Joe Ledger. My only gripe, which isn't a knock on the series, is that Maberry seems to treat characters in the same light as Joss Whedon. It doesn't seem anyone is ever safe.

Logged

Beauty is only skin deep. Which is why I take very good care of my skin.

This follows on the trend I believe I am done with in reading about the Iran Hostage Crisis. This one focused heavily on the hostages, their plight, and and a veneer of the political maneuverings of the US and some of what is known about the hostage takers.

Finally got around to this one. It's been in my backlog forever. Got started on it over my vacation after finishing the previous book. Of course, then I read the Author's Note about how a bunch of other stuff is connected, including The Complete Robot and his other Robot novels as precursors. Which led me to check out The Complete Robot from the local library.

Prelude was good, but it's evident that it's setting the stage for something bigger.

I did a thesis on I, Robot back in high school. Asimov passed away the week before it was due. I've also read some of his science literature. He was truly an impressive author.

Finished a self published book on amazon called Wool:Omnibus edition. It combines 5 different short stories (all the same narrative) and it was an excellent read. It's a very original post apocalyptic setting that I don't believe anyone has done before. While the author tended to be a little verbose, especially in the last 30 pages or so, it was a very well done effective story. Overall it's extremely highly rated on Amazon. Check it out.

Also finished the final book in the Gears of War saga, The Slab. It's a prequel and covers the run up to the first game. It's probably the weakest book in the series, but this was really the first one where Traviss was hemmed in by the existing fiction of world. Solid 4/5 and I'm sad to see the journey end.

Now I'm 40% of the way through A Dance with Dragons and really enjoying. It's not yet up to the gripping standards of the first 3 books or the last 1/2 of the 4th, but I can't wait to get back to it every time I put it down.

After reading the Author's Note on Prelude to Foundation about the overall timeline and inter-related nature of his works, I decided, to paraphrase Inigo Montoya, go back to the beginning.

The collection apparently leaves out Robot Dreams, which is available at the local library. Looking at the wiki page, there are other Asimov stories that are not robot related in there as well. Listed after that, it goes to Caves of Steel and progresses up through the Foundation series.

I had actually written the major paper in Honors English over I, Robot, which is contained within The Complete Robot. I remember specifically that Asimov passed away exactly one week before the final due date.

All in all, I enjoyed the "new" stories that I hadn't read, reading the ones that I remembered, and even rediscovering those that I had forgotten.

This one apparently took me three years to get around to finishing, but I'm glad that I finally did.

It's a bit weighty in places with some not-superficial dives into philosophy and social matters in addition to the normal dates, names and places, which likely contributed to feeling a bit out of my depth and abandoning it for a while.

Finished a self published book on amazon called Wool:Omnibus edition. It combines 5 different short stories (all the same narrative) and it was an excellent read. It's a very original post apocalyptic setting that I don't believe anyone has done before. While the author tended to be a little verbose, especially in the last 30 pages or so, it was a very well done effective story. Overall it's extremely highly rated on Amazon. Check it out.

Finished a self published book on amazon called Wool:Omnibus edition. It combines 5 different short stories (all the same narrative) and it was an excellent read. It's a very original post apocalyptic setting that I don't believe anyone has done before. While the author tended to be a little verbose, especially in the last 30 pages or so, it was a very well done effective story. Overall it's extremely highly rated on Amazon. Check it out.

Ok I bought it. This actually showed up on my kindle daily deal email and I completely disregarded it-I've got to pay better attention to those things. I hope it turns out to be great. I don't think I've ever seen a more highly reviewed book before.

I picked it up because The Complete Robot foreword mentioned that there was a Robot timeline story in this one that hadn't been published elsewhere. Despite the title, the stories were relatively robot-lite, with only four stories common between the two collections.

Asimov was truly a great writer, and while the science of what we know about space and the planets might have moved on since he wrote them, the stories themselves are still entertaining today.

I'm reading The Devil in the White City by Erik Larsson. Wow, is that ever a good book. That is exactly the kind of book that I love-the kind that makes me want to go running to Wikipedia almost every single page.

Just finished up A Game of Thrones. damn, I wish I had read this a long time ago. such a good read and in no way spoiled by knowing how the first book ends. it's quite a long read but it felt like it flew by in no time at all.

before this, I finished up the Girl trilogy (or Millennium trilogy if you will) and while it was not near as good as the second it was a good end to the story. it makes the death of Stieg Larsson quite a tragic note.

I started and stalled on John Dies at the End by James Wong. It feels like a short story shoehorned into a longer novel. A bit disoriented but I will probably go back before too long.

I read book 6 of the Wool series, a prequel which sets up the world and hints at future books. not the greatest when compared to the first 5, but good reading to fans wanting a bit more of the lore.

in case I missed it, I read Shadow of a Dead Star, by Michael Shean. A good dystopian sci-fi novel with hints of Bladerunner throughout but a twist that leaves you scratching your head.

The Last Policeman - Ben H. Winters. a good premise sets up a basic detective story. Loved the premise of a world with 6 months before an unavoidable extinction but it's hard to recommend as the author doesn't dive into the world he's created as deeply as he could have.